- Rule)
brought the
relics to
Kilrymont,
where a
shrine was
established for
their safekeeping and
veneration while Kilrymont was
renamed in
honour of the...
-
Robert of
Scone (died 1159), 12th
century bishop of Cell Rígmonaid (or
Kilrymont, now St Andrews) Scone, New
South Wales,
Australia (named
after the Scottish...
- town
became Kilrymont (i.e. Cellrígmonaid) in the non-Gaelic
orthography of the High
Middle Ages.
Today St
Andrews has
replaced both
Kilrymont (and variants)...
-
school building was
contracted on
Kilrymont Road, a mile and a half from the
South Street building. The
Kilrymont building was
constructed in a modernist...
- names, such as St Mary of the Culdees,
Kirkheugh and
Church of St Mary of
Kilrymont.
Although not
founded as a
collegiate church until the 1240s, Scotland's...
- also
known as St Mary of the Culdees,
Kirkheugh and
Church of St Mary of
Kilrymont This
disambiguation page
lists articles about distinct geographical locations...
-
veneration there. The cult of St
Andrew was
established on the east
coast at
Kilrymont by the
Pictish kings as
early as the
eighth century. The shrine, which...
- English),
Verulamium (Latin) St
Andrews Cill Rìmhinn (Scottish Gaelic),
Kilrymont or
Kilrule (former English),
Sanct Andraes (Lowland Scots) St
Davids Menevia...
-
Hamnavoe →
Stromness Kiliwhimin → Fort
Augustus (18th century) Kilrule,
Kilrymont → St
Andrews Kilbride → West
Kilbride (early 18th century)
Kilbride →...
-
angel to stop
intentionally on the s****s of Fife at the spot
called Kilrymont, a
Pictish settlement which is now St. Andrews. Here he was
welcomed by...